European Convention on the Legal Status of Children Born out of Wedlock

Strasbourg, 15.X.1975

Considering that the aim of the Council of Europe is to achieve a greater unity between
its members, in particular by the adoption of common rules in the field of law;

Noting that in a great number of member States efforts have been, or are being, made to
improve the legal status of children born out of wedlock by reducing the differences
between their legal status and that of children born in wedlock which are to the legal or
social disadvantage of the former;

Recognising that wide disparities in the laws of member States in this field still exist;

Believing that the situation of children born out of wedlock should be improved and that
the formulation of certain common rules concerning their legal status would assist this
objective and at the same time would contribute to a harmonisation of the laws of the
member States in this field;

Considering however that it is necessary to allow progressive stages for those States
which consider themselves unable to adopt immediately certain rules of this Convention,

Have agreed as follows:

Article 1

Each Contracting Party undertakes to ensure the conformity of its law with the
provisions of this Convention and to notify the Secretary General of the Council of Europe
of the measures taken for that purpose.

Article 2

Maternal affiliation of every child born out of wedlock shall be based solely on the
fact of the birth of the child.

Article 3

Paternal affiliation of every child born out of wedlock may be evidenced or established
by voluntary recognition or by judicial decision.

Article 4

The voluntary recognition of paternity may not be opposed or contested insofar as the
internal law provides for these procedures unless the person seeking to recognise or
having recognised the child is not the biological father.

Article 5

In actions relating to paternal affiliation scientific evidence which may help to
establish or disprove paternity shall be admissible.

Article 6

The father and mother of a child born out of wedlock shall have the same obligation to
maintain the child as if it were born in wedlock.

Where a legal obligation to maintain a child born in wedlock falls on certain members of
the family of the father or mother, this obligation shall also apply for the benefit of a
child born out of wedlock.

Article 7

Where the affiliation of a child born out of wedlock has been established as regards
both parents, parental authority may not be attributed automatically to the father alone.

There shall be power to transfer parental authority; cases of transfer shall be governed
by the internal law.

Article 8

Where the father or mother of a child born out of wedlock does not have parental
authority over or the custody of the child, that parent may obtain a right of access to
the child in appropriate cases.

Article 9

A child born out of wedlock shall have the same right of succession in the estate of
its father and its mother and of a member of its father's or mother's family, as if it had
been born in wedlock.

Article 10

The marriage between the father and mother of a child born out of wedlock shall confer
on the child the legal status of a child born in wedlock.

Article 11

This Convention shall be open to signature by the member States of the Council of
Europe. It shall be subject to ratification, acceptance or approval. Instruments of
ratification, acceptance or approval shall be deposited with the Secretary General of the
Council of Europe.

This Convention shall enter into force three months after the date of the deposit of the
third instrument of ratification, acceptance or approval.

In respect of a signatory State ratifying, accepting or approving subsequently, the
Convention shall come into force three months after the date of the deposit of its
instrument of ratification, acceptance or approval.

Article 12

After the entry into force of this Convention, the Committee of Ministers of the Council
of Europe may invite any non-member State to accede to this Convention.

Such accession shall be effected by depositing with the Secretary General of the Council
of Europe an instrument of accession which shall take effect three months after the date
of its deposit.

Article 13

Any State may, at the time of signature, or when depositing its instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession, specify the territory or territories to
which this Convention shall apply.

Any State may, when depositing its instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or
accession or at any later date, by declaration addressed to the Secretary General of the
Council of Europe, extend this Convention to any other territory or territories specified
in the declaration and for whose international relations it is responsible or on whose
behalf it is authorised to give undertakings.

Any declaration made in pursuance of the preceding paragraph may, in respect of any
territory mentioned in such declaration, be withdrawn according to the procedure laid down
in Article 15 of this Convention.

Article 14

Any State may, at the time of signature, or when depositing its instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession or when making a declaration in accordance
with paragraph 2 of Article 13 of this Convention, make not more than three reservations
in respect of the provisions of Articles 2 to 10 of the Convention.
Reservations of a general nature shall not be permitted; each reservation may not affect
more than one provision.

A reservation shall be valid for five years from the entry into force of this Convention
for the Contracting Party concerned. It may be renewed for successive periods of five
years by means of a declaration addressed to the Secretary General of the Council of
Europe before the expiration of each period.

Any Contracting Party may wholly or partly withdraw a reservation it has made in
accordance with the foregoing paragraphs by means of a declaration addressed to the
Secretary General of the Council of Europe, which shall become effective as from the date
of its receipt.

Article 15

Any Contracting Party may, insofar as it is concerned, denounce this Convention by means
of a notification addressed to the Secretary General of the Council of Europe.

Such denunciation shall take effect six months after the date of receipt by the
Secretary General of such notification.

Article 16

The Secretary General of the Council of Europe shall notify the member States of the
Council and any State which has acceded to this Convention of:

any signature;

any deposit of an instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession;

any date of entry into force of this Convention in accordance with Article 11 thereof;

any notification received in pursuance of the provisions of Article 1;

any declaration received in pursuance of the provisions of paragraphs 2 and 3 of Article
13;

any reservation made in pursuance of the provisions of paragraph 1 of Article 14;

the renewal of any reservation carried out in pursuance of the provisions of paragraph 2
of Article 14;

the withdrawal of any reservation carried out in pursuance of the provisions of
paragraph 3 of Article 14;

any notification received in pursuance of the provisions of Article 15 and the date on
which denunciation takes effect.

In witness whereof, the undersigned, being duly authorised thereto, have signed this
Convention.

Done at Strasbourg, this 15th day of October 1975, in English and in French, both texts
being equally authoritative, in a single copy which shall remain deposited in the archives
of the Council of Europe. The Secretary General of the Council of Europe shall transmit
certified copies to each of the signatory and acceding States.